The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 12, Number 18, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 28 August 1919 — Page 6

The Syracuse Journal Democratic Preston Henry Allies, Editor. The Journal has the largest circulation of any newspaper in Koscius- ( ko County, outside of Warsaw. t Published every Thursday, at Syra- ( cuse, Indiana. $2.00 a Year Phones: Office, 4--Residence, 904 I Entered as second-class matter on I May 4th. 1908. at the postoffice at Syracuse. Indiana, under the Act of Congress of March 3rd, 1879. s THURSDAY. AUGUST 28, 1919 WHO AND WHERE Mr.* and Mrs. John T. Riddle spent Saturday evening and Sunday at Winona to hear Gypsy Smith. Mr. and Mrs. George Mathews of South Bend spent the first part of the week here at the home of the former's father, Henry Mathews. Kabo Corsets. Because they are designed on living models bending to every position, Kabo Corsets are delightfully comfortable. This store will give you the service wf a Corsetiere at any time. A. W. Strieby. 814 f Little Elizabeth McClintic has returned home after spending a few weeks with her aunt at Elkhart. WANTED —Girls and women; good wages and clean work. For particulars see Lola Cook Saturday, Sunday and Monday at the home of Geo. W. Zerbe. Mrs. Cleo Holloway of Ligonier and Miss Leila Wertz of Wawasee spent Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Sol Miller. “Star Brand” stands for absolute dependability in shoes and that means style, material, workmanship, service and just prices" in Men’s, Women’s and Children’s shoes. A. W. Strieby. „ 814 f Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Hoffman of South Bend came to spend Wednesday visiting at the L. N. Kitson home, and with other relatives. Mrs. Garfield Walker and little daughter Martha returned from her visit with Mrs. B. B. Morgan at Chesterton and also with friends in Chicago. Whatever you do, wherever you go* you can solve the style problem of a pretty suitable wrap with a smart Bradley Sweater. Our Fall line is complete and the prices are right. A. W. Strieby. 814 f Mrs. M. A. Benner and Mrs. H. A. Miles returned home Monday evening after a few days spent at Akron and Peru, Ind., visiting with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Heitz and two sons, Dean and Perry, of Coldwater, Mich., spent Monday and Tuesday at the Perry R. Sprague home. They were on their way to Wabash and Monticello, Ind., to visit. WANTED—Secure that free September 2nd Catalog of the South Bend Business College,

*■ ,' ! ■ , O% (!■-..* w ANNOUNCEMENT I *> 1 \ ' f ■ > ' s,,a ♦ff\aving assumed the ownership ■U of the Syracuse Flour Mills, operated for the past several years by Jenkins & Son, I wish to exj tend greetings to all the farmer | patrons of our grinding department and all the housewives who I are users of Peerless brand of | flour. It is my purpose to maintain at oil times a superiority of product that will retain your good will. | COLUMBUS DISHER | i

South Bend, Ind. High Salaries, Rapid Promotions for an unlimited number of S. B. B. C. graduates. Write today. 814 f — o— SPANISH WAR VETERANS The 160th Indiana U. S. volunteer infantry of the SpanishAmerican war held its annual reunion in Huntington last Monday, August 18th. During the forenoon, the veterans registered and spent the time in renewing acquaintance with old comrades, and at noon they once more answered mess call. In the afternoon a program and business session was held in the park near the county jail, where the program committee had threatened to lodge all unruly members. Homer Dale of Lebanon, Ind., department com-, mander of Indiana U. S. W. V., was the principal speaker of the afternoon. -— o COME IN AND SETTLE Having disposed of my garage business I request all those against whom I have accounts to come in and make settlement as soon as possible. I will be at my former place of business to receive payments. 8281 S. C. LEPPER. Q. DISEASES A BAR Venereal diseases have come to be almost as much a bar to •afflicted applicants for employment as the use of intoxicants. With the latter handicap regulated by statute, Indiana bakers and distributors of their products have, by legislative enactment, been prohibited from employing anyone not free from venereal or other infectious diseases. This applies to grocers and all handlers of baked food. o BIG MINT CROP HERE Mint growers are realizing from $250 to S3OO per acre, according to reports. Indiana produces two-thirds' of the entire mint grown in the United States, it is said, and St. Joseph county is the largest mint producing county in the world. The yield in the vicinity of Nappanee has been unusually good and producers have received as high as $6.25 per pound for their mint. —(Nappanee Advance. o GARRISON-MILLER The marriage of Hazel Marie Garrison and Roy Dale Miller, both of this place, took place in Warsaw on Wednesday afternoon, August 13, with Rev. J. S. Cain officiating.

ft Vk ■ I •, • • ii’ l - Tip” COME in and let us show you this delightful, well planned, convenient and efficent oil stove. OSBORN & SON Syracuse, Ind. Phone 6

THE SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL

TWO YEARS IN BED . AND ROLLING CHAIR Mrs. Wilson Gave Up Hope— Pounds On Tanlac And Is Now A Well Woman. “For two years I spent all my time either in the hospital, in bed, or in a rolling chair, and during that time I was given* up to die, and I don’t guess I would be here now if it hadn’t been for Tanlac,” said Mrs. E. O. Wilson. Mrs. Wilson is well-known in Atlanta, Ga., her husband having been employed by the Constitution for a number of years. “I was a great sufferer from chronice indigestion,” continued Mrs. Wilson, “and don’t guess anybody ever had to go through with what I did. . I was very weak and nervous, and at times had those dreadful smothering sensations to the point of fainting. I had dreadful headaches, severe pains in my back and over my kidneys and my joints ached all the time. For twq years I had to live entirely on boiled milk, toast and soft boiled eggs, and even that didn’t digest well, and would sour on my stomach. I didn’t know what it was to get a good nights sleep.

Jefferson Theatre GOSHEN Special FAIR WEEK Program Monday, Sept. 1 Matinee 2:30 Evening 6:15 and 8:30 ' Added Attraction: Latest Paramount FATTY ARBUCKLE in “The Desert Hero” Admission—Adults 20c; children 10c. Tuesday and Wednesday, Sept. 2 and 3 3 Acts VAUDEVILLE 3 Acts Also an Extra-Selected Photo Play: OLIVER THOMAS in “Upstairs and Down” Added Attraction Admission: Rogers’Orchestra Adults 30c, children 10c Thursday and Friday, Sept. 4 and 5 ENTIRE CHANGE OF PROGRAM 3 NEW ACTS VAUDEVILLE 3 Feature Picture: CONSTANCE TALMADGE in “Happiness A la Mode” Admission: Adults 30c; children 10c. Saturday, Sept. 6 Entire Change of Program, including THREE NEW ACTS OF VAUDEVILLE Feature Picture: CHARLES RAY in “The Sheriff’s Son” Admission: Adults 30c; children 10c Lyric Theatre Pictures Daily Fair Week K®SfcjBjSSSSSSESSSfeiSB®SS!SESESSBSSSSSSSSSSSBSSSSSIBSSSIBS®S§ Massey-Harris I Grain and Fertilizer Drills | 0 5 i 0 g H R 0 I R 0 f I 1,1 • • l s /KjftiJiij .B.-1 . JM|. . 7BgWWBg M / l H l r - 0 IsOMSniT/lw / WT’V/ \ s\ B\ ffi\7! 1414 B ii r 0 11/to 17 Viw w vw ViWI £ 0 IwJOl w«F W 1 k W WTK Vk Ba bOs Hl W 0 raiilw« W B M Um m la w W B k 0 IMiw ffl ■ ■ IN Il W IB uLW OB K VllllnllllW t o o e> 000 <=> S No. 12 Drill, 11 Run, with Single Discs 0 I I a 0 1 Sewing of the seed is of such importance that care must g | be used in the selection. The above combined grain and g a fertilizer drill is built for varying conditions of soils, and is g 0 accurate. Single or double discs. No. 14 has adjustable | zigzag spring trip hoes, making wide range of uses. Sttel instead of cast iron results in a much lighter and 0 stronger machine, reinforced on all points of strain. Single | I lever for every operation, making uniform sowing certain; a four speeds and fourteen positions with speed lever, special a wheels can be had for larger quantities. Nothing but the Best is good enough 1 I Osborn & Son | Syracuse, - - Phone 6 I a

I took one kind of medicine after another until our house was almost filled with empty bottles, but instead of improving I was, getting worse all the time. Finally they took me to the hospital tor treatment, and 1 was there for five long months, but even that didn’t make me well. It was taking nearly every cent of my husband’s wages to pay my doctor and drug bills—our drug bill alone amounted to sl4 or sls a month, and one doctor bill amounted to SIOB. “It looked like everyting had failed to help me, and I had about given up all hope when one day my husband brought a bottle of Tanlac home with him and asked me to take it. He said he had been reading and hearing a lot of god things about it, and didn’t see any season why it shouldn’t help me. I was confined to my rolling chair when I began taking it. “Do I look like an invalid now? I certainly don’t feel like one, and I have actually gained twen-ty-five (25) pounds on evelen bottles of Tanlac, and feel as well as I ever did in my life. I can eat anything I want —such things as meat, turnips, hard eggs don’t hurt me a particle, and I sleep as good as I did when I was a girl in mv teens. I can get about as well as anybody and just the other day I walked down town, and I am running around the neighborhood calling

on my friends nearly all the time now. I haven’t a pain about me. I believe lam the happiest woman in Atlanta, and I think I have a right to be. I think my recovery is almost a miracle, and everybody in our neighborhood thinks the same.” Tanlac is sold in Syracuse by R. £ Thornburg; in Milford by Milford Drug Co.; in Mentone by W. B. Doddridge. (Advertisement) o — RECHRISTENED “AMERICA” In appreciation of prompt assistance rendered earthquake victims by the American Red Cross, people of a stricken town in the Mugelle Valiev, Italy, have rechristened the place “America.” o MORE SNAKES—REAL ONES? On the farm of Harlow Burns in Whitley county six rattlesnakes were killed in one wheat field. Two were found in one

Give Me a Friendly, Natural Hand-shake an* a friendly natural tobacco. Keep yo’ puton airs an’ “sauced-up” tobaccos for the fellow that likes nut sundaes better than home mado pieSo says a friend of ours named Velvet Joe. And ho just about hits the nail on the head. % Velvet is made for men who think there’s no smoko like real tobacco. If you are that sort cf man, listen: Velvet was bom in old Kentucky, where more than one good thing comes from. It was raised as carefully as any other Kentucky ‘ thoroughbred. But the real secret of Velvet’s friendly qualities is its slow natural ageing in wooden hogsheads. Ageing in the wood never hurt anything—and least of all, tobacco. And so we say, Velvet is good tobacconothing more or less. It runs .second to hone. , The picture of the pipo on the tin needn’t keep you from rolling a jim-dandy cigarette with Velvet ■H IkIWI w® 1® cents J orl7cent«— But IS cents Aclaal Staa -the friendly tobacco

load of wheat. One big fellow was coiled ready to strike when a nearby farmer crushed it with his heel. Three other rattlers were killed in an adjoining field during the day.— (Bristol Banner In reprinting the above, the editor of the North Liberty News, (North Liberty, Ind.,) adds: We wonder what kind of stuff the Whitley county farmers carry in their jugs. Clyde Wood, son of Geo. Wood of east of the city, has made another record for killing rattlesnakes. A few nights ago, while going after the cows, he ran across three large rattlers in the pasture field just south of the house which is on the Beeson estate. Clyde hurried back to the house and procured a shotgun and two shells, all that were available. He went back to where the rattlers lay coiled and tonk a shot at them. The shell failed to explode and he shot the other shell tearing one of the

venomous reptiles to pieces. Being without any more shells and seeing the other snake was making his escape, Clyde picked up a small club and although taking 1 a chance got near enough to the second reptile to deliver a death blow. This snake had seven rattles and a button and was the mother of seven little snakes about five inches long which the lad quickly dispatched. The third rattler made its escape and could not be found by the young man.—(Columbia City Commercial Mail. While assisting ip threshing for Harley Bowen at Rochester Saturday Perry Clawson, killed a rattle snake with seven buttons. “It was a familiar sound although I had not heard it for years,” declared Mr. Clawson, “when the reptile gave warning.” The snake was a big one and the way Mr. Clawson figures it was 14 years old.—(Ligonier Banner.